A lot of anglers are up in arms once again this spring over the gill netting on Mille Lacs Lake by the 8 bands of the sovereign Chippewa Nation that comes off-reservation every year to raid the lake of spawning walleyes.
And the inability of the Department of Natural Resources to do anything about it.
A rally is being planned for May 4th, 2013 Saturday morning following ice out.
The first rally will be held at the Cedar Creek public access.
This will be a peaceful protest and all anglers are welcome to attend. Plan on attending with your cameras to help our voices be heard.
We have a little over a month to get this event organized. There will be an opportunity for everyone to voice his and her opinion. I think the freedom we have of free speech is fundamental to this effort. It's going to be organized by the anglers of Mille Lacs FOR the anglers of Mille Lacs. A barbecue is being planned, also.
Anyone who would like to help us organize is welcome to PM me.
As I said, this is by the anglers for the anglers here on Mille Lacs. There will be no donation money spent on rallys. This is extra, that we are willing to pay for out of our own pockets, and our own time. Although I support Steve and am actively supporting the efforts toward what http://www.savemillelacssportfishing.org./ is accomplishing
They are working toward a common goal and we really hope to get Steve and others associated with this to come and speak at the rally. I've never talked to the guy and not gained a better prospective of what we're facing.
In case you have not been able to follow these stories here is the 4/11/13 news report:
Northern Minnesota walleye-poaching scheme broken
and 10 are indicted !!
Ten men from northern Minnesota have been indicted for allegedly netting walleyes and other fish from lakes on the Red Lake and Leech Lake Indian reservations and reselling them.
Posted: 04/15/2013 12:01:00 AM CDT April 15, 2013 1:10 PM GMTUpdated: 04/15/2013 08:09:13 AM CDT
Minnesota wildlife officials say 21 more people will be charged in an investigation into game fish poaching in north-central and northwestern Minnesota.
The Department of Natural Resources plans a news conference Monday, April 15, to announce charges. They say they come from a three-year investigation into poaching.
The DNR teamed with federal wildlife officials, the Red Lake Band of Chippewa and the Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe in the investigation.
Ten men were indicted last week on federal charges as part of the same investigation. Authorities said then that they were suspected of poaching and selling hundreds of thousands of dollars in walleye and other protected fish.
-- Edited by MCallies on Tuesday 16th of April 2013 08:55:02 PM
-- Edited by MCallies on Wednesday 17th of April 2013 06:30:31 PM
Saving Mille Lacs: Minnesota's Walleye Stadium By Ron Schara – Outdoor News, April 12, 2013
The bad news gets worse. One of the best natural walleye lakes in North America has now become a tragedy.
The number of walleyes swimming in Lake Mille Lacs these days, according to DNR surveys, has declined to a 40-year low. Minnesota's largest single lake fishing economy is now threatened with collapse as dozens of resorts and businesses face uncertainty when the 2013 walleye season opens.
And worse, it’s a walleye crisis of our own making. Mother nature didn't cause this collapse of the state's most popular sport fish. Rather, this is a story of walleye abuse on Mille Lacs, including walleye-collapse warnings ignored by state and tribal fish managers.
For more than a decade, Mille Lacs has been subjected to a combination of voodoo walleye rules by the DNR and spring netting assaults by eight bands of Ojibwe. Since 1998, the DNR and the bands have relied on paper walleyes to set harvest quotas on real walleyes. The results are now in—a population collapse of real walleyes.
It’s time for a reality check.
Those Minnesota anglers who love the lake and its history should be outraged.
Those Minnesotans who depend on Mille Lacs for a job or a livelihood should be outraged.
The Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe whose ancestors settled on its shores and who now prosper with the largest business on those same shores should be outraged over the lake's decline in walleyes.
Gov. Mark Dayton should be outraged and maybe he is, but he's been silent.
DNR Commissioner Tom Landwehr should be outraged and maybe he is, but his DNR fish managers just held a news conference to announce their new strict walleye restrictions on MtD6 Lacs. More of the same voodoo. DNR's new walleye game plan was not only underwhelming but almost guaranteed to achieve two results: harm resorts and businesses around the lake and accomplish nothing long-term to boost the lake's walleye fortunes.
Tribal fish managers also played with mirrors. The Ojibwe bands agreed to reduce their walleye-netting quota by 50 percent to something like 70,000 pounds but that changes nothing. In reality, the new netting quota is the same netting harvest attained last year and, what's more, continues to target the size of walleyes that DNR now declares need protecting from hook and line. As Star Tribune columnist Dennis Anderson wrote: "The bands are using nets during the spring spawn to virtually ensure a highly effective harvest of some of the same fish that, come the sport-fishing opener on May 11, everyone else will try to protect."
Are we watching fish management lunacy? Where are you Gov. Dayton? Isn't it time (and long overdue) to hold a Mille Lacs summit? Get everybody in a room to discuss the lake's walleyes ills and do so with everything on the table in a transparent fashion, free of political correctness and racial overtones.
If you start shouting racial slurs, you're going out the door. We don't need that. Rather, the DNR and tribal leaders need to be present to hear and respond to other ideas for the sake of the lake's fisheries. I find it interesting that former DNR fish biologist, Dick Sternberg, actually predicted the lake's walleye population demise more man a decade ago. Sternberg based his dreary walleye forecast on the DNR's mode of fish management when tribal netting began. If nothing changes, nothing changes.
Secondly, the Mille Lacs Band should be asked to consider a moratorium on spring netting and, instead, harvest its quota by fall netting or hook and line or a combination of both. History says the lake needs a break from gill netting. If you look back at walleye population issues in recent decades—Lake of the Woods, Rainy Lake, Red Lake—all have a common denominator, gill netting walleyes. Gill nets are effective and invite over-harvest. It's that simple.
DNR officials seem reluctant—as least publicly—to ask the bands to temporarily modify their spring harvest methods. On the contrary, the Mille Lacs Band has a history of wanting to be good neighbors and is equally concerned about the lake's walleye condition. Plus, there's nothing wrong with asking.
Thirdly, DNR's new walleye restrictions for 2013 ought to be modified before the season opens. DNR seems unwilling to target the lake's unnaturally high number of large walleyes, despite the problems attributed to them. Perhaps the quota can be modified to be a hybrid between pounds and/or numbers. That’s not going to happen unless Gov. Dayton speaks up.
The DNR also did nothing to reduce hooking-mortality losses, despite anglers request to do so. Hooking mortality estimates could easily be reduced if DNR had listened years ago.
Sternberg, a fish biologist who also sees fishing from the angler's viewpoint suggested these commonsense steps:
1. Avoid tight slots during warm water periods. 2. Require barbless hooks. It can’t hurt and most likely increases walleye survival, especially in warm water. 3. Distribute catch-and-release guidelines to anglers and emphasize release methods that will lead to reduced hooking mortality.
None of Sternberg's recommendations were ever adopted by DNR.
OK, Gov. Dayton, it’s your call. Look at it this way: You and other state leaders jumped into the Viking Stadium funding crisis when the pulltab predictions flopped.